0 past simple and past participle of encode --
1 to change something into a system for sending messages secretly, or to represent complicated information in a simple or short way: --
Grammatical information helps learners to encode sentences.
Some music CDs are encoded with information about the performers and their music.
Many satellite broadcasts are encoded so that they can only be received by people who have paid to see them.
Formally, the role of distinctness, and perceptual factors more generally, is encoded in both faithfulness and markedness constraints.
These sequential activities are also encoded within the intron, on a single multifunctional polypeptide chain.
The massive number of proteins encoded into the genome of the various organisms requires different strategies for their characterization.
Finally, all 38 isolates encoded isoleucine at codon 356.
Rather, these consistent rules of the ordering of perceptions form the grammar or syntax of the language, in which some other content is encoded.
In particular, we show how those examples would be encoded in our language and why, under this new encoding, they typecheck.
In this context, the strategies of all of the players are genetically encoded (called genotype).
However, the point remains that the same predicate-argument structure can be encoded in a fashion that does not include a verb as a sentential head.